Margaret Atwood, Canadian author of 1985’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” is one of the honorees at Variety’s Power of Women luncheon this weekend, and the magazine published a lengthy interview with her Tuesday.

Atwood covered a lot of ground in the interview, including the impact of Hulu’s TV adaptation of “The Handmaid’s Tale” now that Donald Trump has been elected president. (Surprisingly, she says Trump’s election is “not the end of the world.”)

However, Variety decided the best pull quote for clicks was one in which Atwood claims the 9/11 hijackers got the idea from “Star Wars.”

Not only is this a terribly careless statement for her to make, which reads more like a nut job conspiracy theory, she doesn’t even get the scene or movie/episode she’s describing right. https://t.co/r2WozpT4Bq

So there was a bombing run in Star Wars but 9/11 was a suicide dive into buildings with planes.Some kind of….kamikaze *level stare*And yes I read her words in context and I respect her, but I am allowed to be a nerd once in a while and Pearl Harbor happened before Star Wars https://t.co/x44TfDSC64

Paul has a point — there’s plenty more to the interview that’s slightly less, um, controversial, such as Atwood’s take on Hillary Clinton citing “The Handmaid’s Tale” in a speech for Planned Parenthood:

It’s true that if people are that keen on babies, they should support women who are having them. If governments are that keen on them, do you think it’s fair to force them to have babies, provide no healthcare, provide no hospital care? I don’t think those people are serious about babies at all.

Variety probably didn’t use that as a pull quote for their tweet because it never struck them as controversial.